The Economic Assault on Bahrain will not cease until al Khalifa capitulates – free the detainees, cancel the tribunals, implement democratic rule
Sports Briefing | Auto Racing
Bahrain Race Is Canceled
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: June 9, 2011
Organizers of the Bahrain Formula One Grand Prix said they would not pursue plans to reschedule the race and stage it in October. The Bahrain Grand Prix was originally scheduled to open the Formula One season in March, but was scratched because of political unrest.
Last week, Formula One’s world governing body announced a date for the race in October, sparking criticism by fans, some administrators and a driver, Mark Webber. …source
June 9, 2011 No Comments
Al Khalifa implodes Bahrain, destroies labor force while trampling Article 23 of Universal Declaration of Human RIghts
Bahrain Workers’ Rights
8 June, 2011
The more you become involved in the complexities of politics, even within a relatively small country like Bahrain, the more you see the fallacy of that maxim of natural law which states that “All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights”[1] . If only this were true. Sadly, it is because we are not all born free and equal that we must fight to claim the rights that we are all supposed to have. It is not enough to sit back and watch as supposedly ‘inalienable’ rights are taken away from others.
The International Labor Organisation know this, and while they may not have as much influence over western governments as they once did, supra-national organisations like the ILO are central in raising awareness about the abuse of labor rights in authoritarian states like Bahrain. From a legal perspective, it is important to note that it is not just ‘abstract’ multilateral treaties that Bahrain ignores when forcing the sacking of hundreds of workers for their political and religious beliefs, but also bilateral treaties which it has signed such as the 2006 US-Bahrain Free Trade Agreement.[2]
Many international organisations have been alarmed that the current repression in Bahrain undermines all of the hard work that reformers on all sides of the political spectrum have done to modernize Bahrain’s anachronistic political system. The American Federation of Labour and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) noted in a letter to Secretary of Defense Robert Gates that the General Federation of Bahraini Trade Unions (GFBTU), created during the reforms of the 1990s, has been targeted by the government, with more than half of its elected leadership sacked. …more
June 9, 2011 No Comments
Bahrain Military Court attempt Cover-up Saud, al Khalifa Crimes against Humanity in Medics conviction
Bahraini medical staff charged
6 June 2011
Dozens of doctors and nurses who treated injured protesters in Bahrain have appeared in court charged with attempting to topple the monarchy. The 47 medics appeared in a special military court in Manama. They have been held since March, when Bahrain declared an emergency law, which was only lifted last week.
Bahrain‘s mainly Shia protesters have been calling for democratic reforms and more rights for the country’s Shia majority in the Sunni-ruled kingdom. Hundreds of opposition supporters have been detained since March, when Bahrain‘s rulers called in military support from its Gulf Arab neighbours – mostly Saudi Arabia and the UAE – to suppress the protests.
More than 20 people were killed during the government’s campaign to stifle the demonstrations. Two people have been sentenced to death for their part in the protests. Four have died in police custody.
Court restrictions
Only select journalists are allowed to cover the latest trials from inside the special security court, which has military and civilian judges.
In April, Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) expressed concern about attacks on physicians, patients and unarmed civilians since protests began in February. It said dozens of medics have been arrested – some by masked men in the middle of the night.
The Bahraini authorities have denied targeting medics, saying some of Bahrain‘s main medical facilities “had been overrun by political and sectarian activity”. Since the lifting of the emergency law, small protests have been held in Shia villages, but they have been quickly dispersed by police using tear gas, rubber bullets, sound grenades and birdshot (small metal pellets), videos on YouTube appear to show.
June 9, 2011 No Comments
Bahrain’s Shiite clerics criticize police
Bahrain’s Shiite clerics criticize police
Tue Jun 7, 10:59 AM EDT
MANAMA, Bahrain — Bahrain’s Shiite clerics on Tuesday criticized the Gulf kingdom’s police for attacking religious processions just days after emergency rule was lifted.
Five clerics said in a statement that the force police committed “a flagrant violation of freedom of religious practice” against Shiite pilgrims on Sunday, when they attacked a procession commemorating the death of a revered saint, when Shiites were marching around the tiny island and thumping their chests in mourning.
Bahrain’s majority Shiites were complaining of discrimination by the nation’s Sunni rulers long before they started a wave of protests earlier this year, demanding greater political freedoms, more rights and an elected government in Bahrain, the home of the U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet.
Bahrain imposed martial law in March to quell the revolt that was inspired by uprisings against autocratic rulers around the Middle East. Hundreds of opposition supporters, political figures and Shiite professionals like doctors and lawyers were arrested during the emergency rule that expired last week.
“The targeting of processions … forces us to express our strong rejection and to assert that there is no justification whatsoever for the practice,” the clerics’ statement said.
The head of Bahrain’s Public Security, Brig. Gen. Tariq bin Mubarak bin Dayna, defended the action, saying the police advanced on several processions because some pilgrims broke the law by chanting political slogans during the commemoration of Imam Hadi’s death. …more
June 9, 2011 No Comments
Blood in the Street, Injustice in the Courts, Silence from the US
Blood in the Street, Injustice in the Courts, Silence from the US
Posted by: Christoph Koettl, June 8, 2011 at 4:42 PM
While Bahraini authorities are silencing activists, opposition leaders and even medical personnel in military courts, the United States Government remains silent. We have seen the US respond to the popular uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia, yet government officials so far have remained relatively silent on the crackdown in Bahrain – imposed on the streets and in the courts.
The most recent indications for this silent acceptance of human rights violations include the (rather secret) meetings of high level US government officials with the Bahraini Crown Prince yesterday, and the recent refusal by the State Department to testify before the Congressional Human Rights Commission.
The United States’ failure to act in Bahrain represents a tragic double standard in US Middle East policies. In Obama’s May 19th speech on the Middle East and North Africa, the President won applause for rhetoric admonishing the Bahraini Monarchy’s repression of dissent, stating that “you can’t have a real dialogue when parts of the peaceful opposition are in jail.”
Currently, Amnesty has reports of 14 Bahrainis on trial in military court (plus seven in absentia) for organizing and leading recent protests. We believe that many of them are likely to be Prisoners of Conscience.
Beyond Obama’s bold rhetoric, no action from the US has followed, and the unfair trials continue. The newest victims are doctors and nurses, put on trial for helping wounded protesters – and a poet who is on trial for a protest reading! …more
June 9, 2011 No Comments
Obama’s impotent leadership leaves Bahrain’s future and struggle for Democratic reforms in the lurch
Bahrain needs to adopt reforms or risk interference from Iran, says US
Source: BI-ME with AFP , Author: Posted by BI-ME staff
Posted: Sun March 13, 2011 1:06 am
BAHRAIN. US Defense Secretary Robert Gates said on Saturday that Bahrain’s leaders needed to move quickly to adopt major reforms or else risk interference from Iran.
After talks with Bahrain’s king and crown prince, Gates said he was hopeful the government would take “far-reaching steps” but warned that countries across the region could no longer ignore popular demands for democracy.
Although there were no signs Shiite-led Iran was behind unrest in the Gulf kingdom or elsewhere in the region, Tehran would likely work to meddle in Bahrain’s politics amid sectarian tensions, Gates told reporters on his plane after a visit to Manama.
“I expressed the view that we had no evidence that suggested that Iran started any of these popular revolutions or demonstrations across the region,” said Gates, recounting his talks with the country’s king and crown prince.
“But there is clear evidence that as the process is protracted, particularly in Bahrain, the Iranians are looking for ways to exploit it and create problems,” Gates said.
“So I told them, in this instance, time is not our friend.”
Bahrain, a Shiite-majority state ruled by a Sunni dynasty, has been gripped by protests calling for political change since February 14. The US defence chief, who arrived Friday evening in Bahrain amid rising tensions, said he came away encouraged that the country’s leaders king were prepared to accommodate anti-government protesters.
But Gates said he warned them that minor changes would not be enough.
“And I also said that under the circumstances and with the impulse behind the political and economic grievances across the region, that baby steps probably would not be sufficient… that real reform would be necessary.”
With unrest sweeping the Middle East and North Africa, the United States has struggled to balance its longstanding ties with Arab regimes with support for protests demanding democratic reform.
Gates said that Arab governments needed to recognise the scale of the change shaking their countries.
“I told both the king and the crown prince that across the region I did not believe there could be a return to the status quo ante,” he said. “That there was change, and it could be led or it could be imposed.” “And obviously leading the reform and being responsive is the way we’d like to see this move forward,” he said. …more
June 9, 2011 No Comments
The socio-political turmoil in Bahrain, which broke out in February 2011, obscures its economy’s
MIDDLE EAST– Kingdom of Bahrain
Analysts: Chuan Shyang Lin , Hafiza Abdul Rashid
Summary
The socio-political turmoil in Bahrain, which broke out in February 2011, obscures its economy’s near- and medium-term prospects. Amid the unrest, economic activities will be predisposed to disruptions, if not already; perhaps more so following the declaration of martial law by the government in mid-March 2011. Meanwhile, the impact of the unrest on Bahrain’s reputation as a stable and liberal financial centre could have adverse medium-term implications for its economy. Notably, the financial- and banking-services sector is the single largest economic sector in Bahrain, accounting for about a quarter of its gross domestic
product (“GDP”).
We believe that the Bahraini government’s net-asset position could help shield its fiscal health from short-term economic shocks, even as it provides the government with the flexibility to extend fiscal support to the economy. We believe, however, that the positive implication of this cushion may also struggle to find a voice amid the uncertainties surrounding the social, political and economic landscapes in Bahrain.
Economy
Recent political upheaval casts cloud of uncertainty over prospects of Bahrain’s small, external-sector-driven economy. Concern lies in the longer-term impact on Bahrain’s reputation as a relatively stable financial centre in the region.
Critical issues
The political turmoil and violent clashes in Bahrain have negative implications for its position as a regional financial hub, as well as for its economy in general. The financial- and banking-services sector is a major contributor to Bahrain’s economy, accounting for about a quarter of its real GDP. Amid the tension, we believe that foreign and offshore banks operating there may consider relocating to an alternate base in the near to medium term, especially if the situation is prolonged. Economic uncertainties and the repatriation of foreign assets out of Bahrain could pose challenges on both the fiscal and monetary-policy fronts. …more
June 9, 2011 No Comments
Bahrain Suppressing Truth by Intensifying Crackdown on Photographers
Bahrain Targets Freedom of Expression and Suppressing Truth by Intensifying Crackdown on Photographers
Thursday, June 2, 2011
Ahlul Bayt News Agency
“A picture is worth a thousand words” a saying proven true once again by Bahrain’s uprising; since February 14, photography spoke out of the peacefulness and nonviolent nature of the Bahraini protesters in pearl roundabout and revealed the legitimacy of their demands for political reforms to the world. It, also, exposed the brutality of the Bahraini government through photos of killing, arresting, torturing and terrorizing civilians.
Photographers, both professional and amateur, have had a vital role in documenting pro-democracy protests in Bahrain. During the first days and through their photos they were able to educate and inform the public of the demands of the protesters by covering their peaceful rallies[1] , events calling for unity like the human chain[2] and informative and educational speeches by Bahraini intellectuals held every night in the pearl roundabout. Bahraini photographers were also active protesters with their own demands which they expressed in the photographers’ rally on 28 Feb 2011; they held signs saying “A Picture delivers an effective message of Justice” and “No for arresting photographers”[3] . Whilst, international media was either banned from entering Bahrain or did not give any priority to covering Bahrain’s events, it was the Bahraini photographers who have covered the violent crackdowns on the protesters by the pearl roundabout, in front of Salmaniya Medical Center[4] , and by Bahrain Financial Harbor[5] by using tear gas canister, rubber bullets and live ammunition against unarmed protesters. Also, their covering exposed the role of the thugs protected by the security men in the attack on the University of Bahrain[6] . These photos and videos were soon distributed via the social networks and some of the media channels.
Their role became even more critical especially after imposing the Martial law on March 15, 2011 which limited media coverage; foreign journalists and photographers have been deported and banned from entering Bahrain and local media coverage was limited to government’s official statements, in order to prevent the dissemination of information about protests. Despite of that, Bahraini photographers continued to cover the atrocities of the Bahraini government by documenting the daily security crackdowns on citizens at checkpoints[7] , vandalizing their cars[8] and exposing the use of army vehicles to seize villages, although, Bahraini officials claimed that their role was to guard the vital institutions of State, not only that but they went as far as demolishing Shiite mosques and places of worship[9] . …more
June 9, 2011 No Comments
Debt troubles at Bahrain investment firm GFH
Debt troubles at Bahrain investment firm GFH
June 9 (Reuters) – Bahrain’s Gulf Finance House GFHB.BH (GFHK.KW) has been badly hit by a regional real estate crash and has struggled to reduce its debt as the repayment of a $100 million loan looms in August.
Its troubles underscore how the financial crisis has challenged banks and regulators in the oil exporting economies of the Gulf, once thought immune from shocks due to energy income, and how far some must go before regaining solid ground.
Below are questions and answers on the risks to GFH, its financial partners and Bahrain’s banking industry.
HOW LARGE IS THE BANK’S EXPOSURE?
The investment house in February narrowly escaped default by striking an eleventh-hour agreement with lenders to roll over a portion of a $300 million loan after massive write-downs on its property portfolio.
GFH has deleveraged its balance sheet over the past months and shrunk liabilities from a peak of $2.6 billion in mid-2008 to $855 million as of March 31.
This includes $169 million in placements from financial and other institutions and $397 million in financing liabilities.
It also includes a $100 million loan arranged by German lender WestLB that is due in August and a $50 million money market placement by First Energy Bank, established by GFH in 2008, which is due in 2011.
It also has an $80 million loan outstanding for which Bahrain’s Liquidity Management House (LMC) acted as lead arranger, maturing in several tranches until 2012.
About $137 million of a GFH sukuk, or Islamic bond, that matures in 2012 was outstanding at the end of the first quarter. …more
June 9, 2011 No Comments
Obama Hides Meeting with Top Bahraini Leader—And Mutes Criticism of Ongoing Crackdown
Obama Hides Meeting with Top Bahraini Leader—And Mutes Criticism of Ongoing Crackdown
Bahrain_crackdown
Amidst an intensifying crackdown on anti-government protesters in the tiny Gulf island kingdom of Bahrain, President Obama met Tuesday with Crown Prince Salman bin Isa al-Khalifa, a visit that was not announced beforehand. We speak with Nabeel Rajab, president of Bahrain’s Center for Human Rights, based in Manama. “On the ground, we don’t see anything, any signal, that makes us optimistic that the government has the willingness to go for a dialogue with the opposition and to listen to the grievances and the demands of the people,” says Rajab, noting that soldiers from Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Bahrain continue to arrest protesters and the doctors treating those injured during pro-democracy demonstrations. [includes rush transcript]
June 9, 2011 No Comments
Nabeel Rajab, IFEX Rise above Bahrain’s repressive scourage – Internet enables loosing of chains
8 June 2011
Bahrain testimony a highlight of “best ever” IFEX conference
Security forces prevented IFEX member Nabeel Rajab, president of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights (BCHR), from attending the IFEX General Meeting and Strategy Conference in person in Beirut last week. But they couldn’t prevent him from talking about recent human rights abuses in Bahrain via Skype, nor IFEX members and partners who were listening from initiating an international mission to Bahrain in the coming days. This was just one of the many highlights of the IFEX 2011 conference.
The Bahraini government had prevented Rajab from flying to join his IFEX colleagues in Beirut on 29 May. Maryam al-Khawaja, who heads BCHR’s foreign relations department, cancelled her trip after receiving death threats.
Instead, fellow free expression and human rights defenders gathered for a 40-minute call on 2 June, during which Rajab thanked them for their support and welcomed plans for a mission composed of IFEX members and other concerned groups to Bahrain in the coming months.
Rajab also brought them up to date with the rounds of arrests, detentions, assaults and threats that both preceded and followed 1 June when the King cancelled the state of emergency and called for “national dialogue” on reform.
“How can there be a dialogue when people even this morning are being detained?” he asked. If the government is serious about dialogue, it must “stop persecuting people for doing their human rights work, allow journalists to publish freely, stop the bans on blogs,” he said.
Rajab repeatedly thanked IFEX members for shining a light on Bahrain when other internationals failed to do so: “We are victims of the West who won’t criticise the Bahrain government even though they criticised Libya and supported the revolutions in Egypt or Tunisia. …more
June 9, 2011 No Comments
King Hamad, Please Release My Friend
Release My Friend!
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
Published: June 8, 2011
Dear King Hamad of Bahrain,
Among those whom you’re imprisoning in Bahrain is a friend of mine. He is an artist, one of the most gentle souls alive, and my deepest fear is that your government may be brutalizing him because of his friendship with me.
Your Majesty, I’m speaking of Hassan al-Sahaf. Now 57, he studied in Britain and then in Los Angeles, Boston and in Oregon, where my mother taught art history — and Hassan became one of my mother’s all-time favorite students. That was 30 years ago, but we have remained in touch ever since.
King Hamad, you present the crackdown on the democracy movement as an effort to restore order. But Hassan is not some teenage firebrand hurling rocks; he’s a slight, graying scholar committed to peace. That’s the pattern: So many of the people in your jails are doctors and intellectuals whose only offense is to dream of democracy. …more
June 9, 2011 No Comments
Sectatrian divide consistent with Obama-Petreaus Policy-Practice in Af-Pak, Iraq
FEATURE-Sectarian divide widens after Bahrain unrest
Thu Jun 9, 2011 8:00am GMT
By Andrew Hammond
MANAMA, June 9 (Reuters) – Sectarian tension between Sunni and Shi’ite Muslims has reached new heights in Bahrain after pro-democracy protests that the Sunni minority government crushed with martial law and foreign military forces.
Inspired by the uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia, Sunni and Shi’ite Bahrainis took to the streets in early February to demand political reforms in a country where the ruling Al Khalifa family appoints cabinet ministers and an upper house of parliament, neutering the powers of the elected assembly.
An idealistic movement began with slogans such as “No Sunni, No Shi’ite — Just Bahraini”, but now sectarian fear and anger are uppermost on this small island state where Saudi Arabia and Iran are playing out a proxy contest for regional supremacy.
Sunnis and Shi’ites talk of friends lost and of a rift that once seemed manageable. Sunnis feel threatened, Shi’ites abused.
Fatima, a Shi’ite accountancy graduate, recalled past tensions, when Shi’ites clashed with police and faced trials in the 1990s, but said the government response was harsher this time because the protest movement was so large and unexpected.
“It hurts me. I have very close Sunni friends. People inter-married and had close personal relations,” she said. “Even if the government took a step back now, the Sunnis have been convinced that we are criminals.”
Shi’ites have long complained of discrimination in Bahrain, saying the government distributes jobs and housing on a pro-Sunni sectarian basis, to the extent of giving nationality to Sunnis from other countries to offset Shi’ite numbers.
There are few Shi’ites in the army and their number in the state bureaucracy has steadily dwindled since independence from Britain in 1971, Shi’ites say. The government denies this.
Sunnis often point to the wealth of many Shi’ites and accuse them of clannishness in business.
Thousands of Shi’ites were detained, fired or suspended from work under martial law — 21 rights activists and political figures face military trial for trying to overthrow the system and 48 doctors and nurses are on trial for storing weapons, seizing control of a hospital and anti-government incitement. …more
June 9, 2011 No Comments
Continuing Crackdown in Bahrain
Continuing Crackdown in Bahrain
Interviewee: Roy Gutman, Middle East Correspondent, McClatchy Newspapers
Interviewer: Bernard Gwertzman, Consulting Editor, CFR.org
June 8, 2011
Roy GutmanPresident Barack Obama met briefly June 7 with Bahrain’s Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad bin Isa al Khalifa and supported the Sunni royal family’s ending of martial law, calling for a national dialogue to begin in July. However, the crackdown on Bahrain’s majority Shiite population continues. Dozens of doctors and nurses went on trial June 6 on charges of participating in efforts to overthrow the monarchy, and leading Shiite political figures are in prison. It seems that little has changed, says Roy Gutman, Middle East correspondent for McClatchy newspapers, who believes the ending of martial law was largely staged to encourage the staging of the Formula One in Bahrain this fall. While the visit of the crown prince, a reform proponent, was an effort to ease tensions, Gutman says the government seems to be pressing its offensive against protesters.
The United States government has been critical of the arrests of Shiite protesters in Bahrain, and President Obama, in fact, called for Bahrain to release prisoners and facilitate a dialogue. How do you see the situation in Bahrain?
I’m not there, to be honest. The Bahraini authorities wouldn’t let me in. They don’t let reporters in except perhaps one a week from the international media. Everything I say is with the caveat that I’m speaking to you from Baghdad.
From what I hear, Bahrain is a very tense place. The state of emergency was formally lifted on June 1, but so many elements of the state of emergency prior to June 1 are still there. In some ways, things are not getting any better. They might in fact be getting worse. In the last twenty-four hours, Bahraini authorities put forty-eight doctors and nurses on trial on charges that were possibly invented. The lawyers and defendants did not see the charges until yesterday. This has been a military tribunal where the international media was completely excluded. It’s shocking that they’ve done this on the eve of the crown prince’s visit to the United States (CSMonitor).
What is the crown prince hoping to do here? He was recently in England, where he met (AFP) with Prime Minister David Cameron.
There’s an effort to restore some good will between Bahrain and its major international partners in the West, as opposed to the Middle East, because these relations have been very strained by this brutal crackdown. The crown prince is the face of reform in Bahrain; he’s the man who really called for it, supported it, urged it, put his neck on the line to achieve it. He’s about the best person they could possibly send, in terms of a person who has respect. The problem is, he has not been in charge. In fact, one has the feeling that most everything he stands for is being stripped away and undermined by hardliners in the same regime.
The crown prince is the son of the king, Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa. But many experts say that the real power belongs to the prime minister, Sheikh Khalifa Bin Salman Al Khalifa. Is that true?
There’s a lot of evidence that he is getting his way, and certainly over issues of great importance. This is all a guessing game. Nobody except for the royal court knows what’s going on inside the palace. I will say that two days after Obama delivered the speech that was quite critical of Bahrain–the first time that the Obama administration had used strong words and called for changes of policy publicly–the prime minister gave an interview and used very harsh language regarding the people who were being detained and the respected, moderate Shiite political opposition. Perhaps it was not an intentional rebuff to Obama’s speech, [but] he was saying, we’re going to continue with the crackdown. He’s the strongman, and the king is probably the person in the middle between the crown prince and the prime minister. The chief of the armed forces is also a hardliner. …full interview
June 9, 2011 No Comments